"die bona mea"
This common greeting "good morning" translates into a single word in Latin. The two-word English phrase becomes the single-word "salve".
Stella is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "a star."Specifically, the Latin word is a feminine noun. It is not preceded by a definite or indefinite article since Latin has no equivalent to "the" or "a." But it may be preceded by una in the sense of "one": una stella ("one star").The pronunciation will be "STEHL-lah" in both the classical Latin of the ancient Romans and the liturgical Latin of the Church.
In Latin, from which the English word is derived, Lucifer(as a noun) means "light-bearer" (from the words lucem ferre). It was the name given to the Morning Star, i.e. the planet Venus when seen at dawn.
One has to go to the Originating Culture, the Greeks. In one of Homer's epic poems, the enemies of the Greeks one morning find a huge replica of a horse at their gates. They bring it in, but the next night Greek soldiers hiding INSIDE the big horse, come out, surprise the enemies and win the city. Likewise, you don't want the Latin word FOR Pony. The Pony is a "cheat sheet" of the translation of words, phrases and passages Latin to Other-Language, Other-Language to Latin. You go inside the Pony, and win the test, >temporarily< .
Latin has several ways of expressing "morning":manematutinum tempusprima lux
Mane.
morning
Lucifer meaning the morning star in latin Tarik meaning morning star in arabic
"die bona mea"
It means ante meridiem in Latin, I remember it as "after midnight."
Lucifer meaning the morning star in latin Tarik meaning morning star in arabic
Depending on the context, the Latin word mane could be:a command: "stay!" (addressed to one person, or perhaps to one dog)a noun, meaning "morning"an adverb, meaning "early in the morning"
It stands for "ante" as in "ante meridiem." It's Latin for "before noon" or "in the morning."
It's Latin and means 'morning prayers' particularly in a monastery.
It stands for "ante" as in "ante meridiem." It's Latin for "before noon" or "in the morning."
It stands for "ante" as in "ante meridiem." It's Latin for "before noon" or "in the morning."